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Here's Your Joke Writing Cheatsheet
Here's Your Joke Writing Cheatsheet
Introduction
Say you’re sitting down at your daily writing session (you are scheduling your daily
writing sessions…right?), and you begin to put pen to paper or put your fingers on the
keyboard and then nothing happens… you try to come up with ideas, but your brain
seems to discharge them as not worthy of your time before you can write a single word.
What do you do?
Wouldn’t it be great to have a technique; a focused process that you can apply that can
walk you all the way through to a completed joke or routine?
One of the most common concerns I hear from humor writers and comedians is that
they have days and sometimes weeks where they “can’t think of anything funny.” That
used to happen to me. I still have moments like that, but they are fleeting.
I thought to myself that, lately I’m never without something to write or make jokes
about. There’s always something there, it seems. So I thought about how my mind
comes up with stuff and I want to share it with you.
Keep in mind, this is just ONE of the methods I use to find and develop comedy
material. Here’s the process:
I broke it down into steps and I’m going to give you that process right now. I’m calling it
“JOKE-WRITING 1-2-3!”
Start with stuff that is close to you. Look around you, think about your surroundings,
situations, behaviors and ask yourself 3 questions:
1. What is new?
2. What has changed?
3. What have I acquired?
What’s new? Every day is a new day. With all the holidays and special occasion days we
celebrate in this country and worldwide, almost every day of every week gives us
something to joke about. Did you know March 1st is National Pancake Day? Of course, it
is immediately followed by National Maple Syrup Day!
As you ask yourself these questions, don’t leave anything out! Write it all down! Just
looking in the mailbox, I’m sure everyone has acquired a cell phone bill, heating bill,
water bill, cable bill, etc. You have a new pair of sneakers, let’s talk about them! Don’t
think there’s anything funny with that? Remember Jerry Seinfeld wrote an entire show
about ‘nothing,’ that lasted for nine years and the only reason it went off the air was
because he was ready to move on.
Too many comedians and humor writers stop too soon. They think, “there’s nothing
funny there. They don’t take the time to write out everything about their sneakers and
use their imagination to develop material. Every comedian and humor writer should be
able to take any logical grouping of words and make it funny. But it takes dedication
and work.
Process
Let’s look at a situation that happened to me recently. I asked “What have I acquired?” I
just got a new video poker app for my Smartphone.
With this information we have all we need to develop material for the premise “video
poker app.” If you’ve read my blog or have taken my classes you know the science of
why people laugh. Two prime reasons (especially with regard to commercially
acceptable humor), are surprise and embarrassment. So let’s ask ourselves how we can
utilize a set up line that might present surprise or embarrassment.
So, if I look at the entirety of the material I’ve collected I can put together a set up line
that might go something like this:
I just got a new video poker app for my Droid. I love playing it in the bathroom.
Now we have two or more clearly defined ideas: Video-poker App and bathroom. If we
were to use the listing technique that I teach in my seminars we could easily come up
with phrases that we could easily combine to make a joke. The first one I came up with
was:
I just got a new video poker app for my Droid. I love playing it in the bathroom.
My wife’s feelings are mixed on that. She says she loves the fact that I found a new way
to play with myself, but she gets a little irritated when I’m on the toilet and she hears me
yell, “Full House!”
Just think of the possibilities with the phrases: “flush,” “straight flush,” “royal flush,” “all
clubs.” Pinochle (pee-knuckle),” “Texas Hold-‘em,” and the list goes on.
If we really took the time and fleshed out all the possible plays we have with those two
ideas, we could come up with an easy 10, 20 or 30 jokes on just the video-poker app
premise, alone 20-30 jokes!
And just think we started the day thinking, “I can’t think of anything funny to write
about…”
This is just one of my many processes for writing jokes that I have used over the years to
generate literally thousands of jokes. Now you can use it too.
Jerry Corley is a professional comedian with over 25 years of experience and a former writer for
Jay Leno and The Tonight Show. He teaches a comedy writing and performance at the Stand-up
Comedy Clinic.
Visit http://www.standupcomedyclinic.com